Hollow Other Onmy 3 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, logotypes, packaging, industrial, marquee, tech, retro, mechanical, decorative texture, industrial feel, retro display, sign-like clarity, geometric, rounded corners, perforated, stencil-like, display.
A geometric, monolinear sans with squared proportions and generously rounded corners. Strokes are rendered as solid black outlines punctuated by evenly spaced circular perforations that track along the contours, creating a hollowed, riveted look. Curves are built from chamfered segments and softened corners rather than true continuous arcs, keeping counters compact and shapes tightly engineered. Spacing is fairly open for a display face, and the forms maintain consistent stroke behavior across upper- and lowercase with simple, constructed terminals.
Best suited to display contexts where the perforated texture can be appreciated—posters, headlines, event graphics, signage, packaging, and logo wordmarks. It can also work for short UI or tech-themed labels when used at larger sizes and with ample spacing, but the internal cutouts will dominate in body text.
The repeated perforations evoke sheet metal, pegboard, and illuminated marquee lettering, giving the font an industrial yet playful retro-tech tone. It feels engineered and utilitarian, with a distinctive decorative texture that reads as mechanical and attention-grabbing rather than neutral.
The design appears intended to merge a straightforward geometric sans skeleton with a distinctive perforated knockout treatment, producing a rugged, fabricated aesthetic. Its consistent dot pattern and rounded-rectangle construction suggest a focus on recognizable, repeatable forms that read like industrial lettering or decorative marquee characters.
The dotted cutouts remain consistent in size and rhythm, functioning like an inline pattern rather than shading; this makes the letterforms visually busier at small sizes but striking at larger settings. Numerals and capitals appear especially sturdy and sign-like, while lowercase retains the same constructed geometry for a cohesive system.